Journal
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GYNECOLOGY & OBSTETRICS
Volume 154, Issue 1, Pages 24-30Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ijgo.13488
Keywords
depression; postpartum; social support
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Funding
- Qazvin University of Medical Sciences
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The study found that the employment status of the spouse and life satisfaction of the mother are important factors influencing whether spousal social support is received in the postpartum period. Additionally, there is a significant negative correlation between postpartum depression (PPD) and spousal social support.
Objective To investigate the predictive factors of receiving spousal support in the postpartum period and its relationship with postpartum depression (PPD). Methods This cross-sectional study was conducted between January and May 2019 in 250 primiparous women to determine the predictors of spousal social support in the postpartum period. Three scales were used to collect data: The Demographic and Obstetric Checklist, the Postpartum Partner Support Scale, and the Edinburgh Postpartum Depression Scale. Results Multivariate regression showed that the employment status of the spouse and life satisfaction variables were predictive of whether social support was received from a spouse in the postpartum period. In total, the variables examined in this model explained 19% of the variance for a mother receiving spousal social support in the postpartum period. PPD and spousal social support had a moderately inverse and significant correlation (beta = -0.39). Conclusion Life satisfaction and employment of the spouse are important predictive variables for receiving social support of the spouse in the postpartum period. There is also a significant inverse relationship between PPD and spousal social support.
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